Category Archives: Afghanistan

A Texan’s valor award

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Army SPC Monica Lin Brown, a medic from Lake Jackson (south of Houston) who joined with her brother in 2006, becomes only the second woman since WW2 to earn the Silver Star for combat valor.

Tapper taps out

Some journalist. Mr. T. finds the army captain who was Obama’s source for his inaccurate statements last night in Austin about the army in Afghanistan. Then, other than merely noting that the captain backs up Barry (why wouldn’t he, he was the source) Tapper doesn’t question his assertions or bother to get a second source to verify them, or even overtly notice that they contradict Obama’s public remarks. Wonder how much ABC pays for lazy work like this. Ace also takes him to task.

Barry’s blunder

Not that it matters, at least here in the San Francisco of Texas, which is pretty well set as Obama Country for the Texas Dem primary, judging by the bumper stickers and yard signs. But Barry’s claim at last night’s Dem/MSM dog-and-pony-show (laughingly called "a debate") that our troops in Afghanistan are so desperate that they must capture their weapons from the Taliban is wacko.

From the CNN transcript: "You know, I’ve heard from an Army captain who was the head of a rifle platoon — supposed to have 39 men in a rifle platoon. Ended up being sent to Afghanistan with 24 because 15 of those soldiers had been sent to Iraq. And as a consequence, they didn’t have enough ammunition, they didn’t have enough humvees. They were actually capturing Taliban weapons, because it was easier to get Taliban weapons than it was for them to get properly equipped by our current commander in chief."

First of all, captains lead companies, not platoons. And for various reasons that would be obvious to anyone with minimal knowledge of our NATO vs the Taliban’s Russian weaponry–which apparently does not include Barry–nothing they have would be useful to us and vice versa. Different rifles. Different rifle ammo. Different shells. &c. So now we see that the Dems’ prospective Pacifist-in-Chief is a bigger boob than anyone thought. Or else his wife (she of the finally-proud-to-be-an-American remark) isn’t the only one affected by self-righteousness and the blunders it breeds.

UPDATE: Heh. And Barry’s claim flew right over Hilarity’s head, as Wretchard points out. These Dems labor in amazing ignorance sometimes.

MORE:  ABC News’ Jake Tapper interviews the captain Obama quoted, though does not name him or feel the need to question or corroborate his details, and shows (though Tapper doesn’t say so) that Barry (to be charitable about it) garbled the officer’s message. For one thing, the captain didn’t say fifteen of his men went to Iraq, or that they lacked ammunition in Afghanistan, or raise the crucial Obama detail that they needed captured weapons–only that they had used some of them from time to time. Obama also didn’t mention that this information was five years old, occurring in 2003. So, while Tapper concludes that we bloggers have gone off half-cocked, I still think it’s a shoddy political performance, and close to an outright lie.

Afghan burning

Finishing "A Thousand Splendid Suns" got me interested again in Afghanistan, which I admit had fallen off my radar as of late. Just in time to find out that things look bleak. Nothing like the days when the Taliban was in charge, but apparently sliding back in their direction. NATO isn’t owning up to its promises, Canada is getting antsy, the Bush administration is promising a few thousand more Marines. This is supposed to be the Dems favored campaign, well Hilarity’s. Obama, last we heard, wants to retreat everywhere and invade Pakistan. Nowadays, he says nothing. What would McCain do? Shift troops there as they are withdrawn from Iraq? One brigade at a time? At least we know he won’t give up.

Via Soobdujour. 

A Thousand Splendid Suns

It’s a compelling–if truly unsettling–read, this second novel by the Afghani author Kahled Hosseini. His "The Kite Runner" was a bestseller, indeed, probably selling a good many more than the few tens of thousands required to be called a bestseller. In this one, women are the focus rather than children, along with the whole recent (well, almost three decades) tortured history of Afghanistan. It shows quite graphically how awful women can have it in an Islamic country, though here the main villain is practically an atheist. He doesn’t even go to the mosque until the Taliban forces everyone to go, and one of the gentlest characters, with the best intentions for one of the main women characters, is a Muslim preacher. I don’t want to give away too much, but as you slog through the depressing parts, reading on to find out what happens next, take heart for a promising conclusion.

Mr. Raccoon

I was sitting on the patio under the outside light, smoking and reading "A Thousand Splendid Suns" when a raccoon shuffled up to me out of the darkness. I was amazed. He appeared to be the size of a small German shepard. A really big raccoon, in other words, though wearing the usual black mask. But he looked friendly enough. Hungry, perhaps. "Good evening, Mr. Raccoon," I said. I almost expected him to say something polite in response, maybe ask for the time or some leftovers. I would have directed him to the garbage can on the other end of the rancho. Instead, he stopped in his tracks, retreated slowly into the darkness and scurried away. Adios, Mr. Raccoon.

Anti-Jihadi comic book

Artist John Cox, of Cox & Forkum fame, brings the war on Islamic facism to the world of comic books. Matamoros is not Captain America, fortunately, but it’s just as accessible. Maybe more so. I’ve ordered my copy. Matamoros, by the way, is Spanish for Moor-slayer.